<h2><SPAN name="dying-fires"></SPAN>Dying Fires</h2>
<p><br/></p>
<p><span>Young Overbeck's father was editor and
proprietor of the county paper in Colfax,
California, and the son, so soon as his high-school
days were over, made his appearance in the
office as his father's assistant. So abrupt was the
transition that his diploma, which was to hang over
the editorial desk, had not yet returned from the
framer's, while the first copy that he was called on
to edit was his own commencement oration on the
philosophy of Dante. He had worn a white pique
cravat and a cutaway coat on the occasion of its
delivery, and the county commissioner, who was
the guest of honour on the platform, had
congratulated him as he handed him his sheepskin. For
Overbeck was the youngest and the brightest
member of his class.</span></p>
<p><span>Colfax was a lively town in those days. The
teaming from the valley over into the mining
country on the other side of the Indian River was at
its height then. Colfax was the headquarters of
the business, and the teamsters—after the long
pull up from the Indian River Cañon—showed
interest in an environment made up chiefly of
saloons.</span></p>
<p><span>Then there were the mining camps over by Iowa
Hill, the Morning Star, the Big Dipper, and
further on, up in the Gold Run country, the Little
Providence. There was Dutch Flat, full of
Mexican-Spanish girls and "breed" girls, where the
dance-halls were of equal number with the bars.
There was—a little way down the line—Clipper
Gap, where the mountain ranches began, and where
the mountain cow-boy lived up to the traditions of
his kind.</span></p>
<p><span>And this life, tumultuous, headstrong, vivid in
colour, vigorous in action, was bound together by
the railroad, which not only made a single
community out of all that part of the east slope of the
Sierras' foothills, but contributed its own life as
well—the life of oilers, engineers, switchmen,
eating-house waitresses and cashiers, "lady" operators,
conductors, and the like.</span></p>
<p><span>Of such a little world news-items are evolved—sometimes
even scare-head, double-leaded descriptive
articles—supplemented by interviews with
sheriffs and ante-mortem statements. Good grist
for a county paper; good opportunities for an
unspoiled, observant, imaginative young fellow at
the formative period of his life. Such was the
time, such the environment, such the conditions
that prevailed when young Overbeck, at the age of
twenty-one, sat down to the writing of his first novel.</span></p>
<p><span>He completed it in five months, and, though he
did not know the fact then, the novel was good.
It was not great—far from it, but it was not merely
clever. Somehow, by a miracle of good fortune,
young Overbeck had got started right at the very
beginning. He had not been influenced by a fetich
of his choice till his work was a mere replica of
some other writer's. He was not literary. He
had not much time for books. He lived in the
midst of a strenuous, eager life, a little primal even
yet; a life of passions that were often elemental in
their simplicity and directness. His schooling and
his newspaper work—it was he who must find or
ferret out the news all along the line, from Penrhyn
to Emigrant Gap—had taught him observation
without—here was the miracle—dulling the edge
of his sensitiveness. He saw, as those few, few
people see who live close to life at the beginning
of an epoch. He saw into the life and the heart
beneath the life; the life and the heart of Bunt
McBride, as with eight horses and much abjuration
he negotiated a load of steel "stamps" up the
sheer leap of the Indian Cañon; he saw into the
life and into the heart of Irma Tejada, who kept
case for the faro players at Dutch Flat; he saw
into the life and heart of Lizzie Toby, the
biscuit-shooter in the railway eating-house, and into the
life and heart of "Doc" Twitchel, who had degrees
from Edinburgh and Leipsic, and who, for obscure
reasons, chose to look after the measles, sprains
and rheumatisms of the countryside.</span></p>
<p><span>And, besides, there were others and still others,
whom young Overbeck learned to know to the
very heart's heart of them: blacksmiths, traveling
peddlers, section-bosses, miners, horse-wranglers,
cow-punchers, the stage-drivers, the storekeeper,
the hotel-keeper, the ditch-tender, the prospector,
the seamstress of the town, the postmistress, the
schoolmistress, the poetess. Into the lives of these
and the hearts of these young Overbeck saw, and
the wonder of that sight so overpowered him that
he had no thought and no care for other people's
books. And he was only twenty-one! Only
twenty-one, and yet he saw clearly into the great,
complicated, confused human machine that clashed
and jarred around him. Only twenty-one, and yet
he read the enigma that men of fifty may alone
hope to solve! Once in a great while this thing
may happen—in such out of the way places as that
country around Colfax in Placer County,
California, where no outside influences have play,
where books are few and misprized and the reading
circle a thing unknown. From time to time such
men are born, especially along the line of cleavage
where the furthest skirmish line of civilisation
thrusts and girds at the wilderness. A very few
find their true profession before the fire is stamped
out of them; of these few, fewer still have the
force to make themselves heard. Of these last the
majority die before they attain the faculty of
making their message intelligible. Those that remain
are the world's great men.</span></p>
<p><span>At the time when his first little book was on its
initial journey to the Eastern publishing houses,
Overbeck was by no means a great man. The
immaturity that was yet his, the lack of knowledge of
his tools, clogged his work and befogged his vision.
The smooth running of the cogs and the far-darting
range of vision would come in the course of the
next fifteen years of unrelenting persistence. The
ordering and organising and controlling of his
machine he could, with patience and by taking
thought, accomplish for himself. The original
impetus had come straight from the almighty gods.
That impetus was young yet, feeble, yet, coming
down from so far it was spent by the time it
reached the earth—at Colfax, California. A
touch now might divert it. Judge with what care
such a thing should be nursed and watched;
compared with the delicacy with which it unfolds, the
opening of a rosebud is an abrupt explosion. Later
on, such insight, such undeveloped genius may
become a tremendous world-power, a thing to split a
nation in twain as the axe cleaves the block. But at
twenty-one, a whisper—and it takes flight; a
touch—it withers; the lifting of a finger—it is gone.</span></p>
<p><span>The same destiny that had allowed Overbeck
to be born, and that thus far had watched over his
course, must have inspired his choice, his very first
choice, of a publisher, for the manuscript of "The
Vision of Bunt McBride" went straight as a
home-bound bird to the one man of all others who could
understand the beginnings of genius and recognise
the golden grain of truth in the chaff of unessentials.
His name was Conant, and he accepted the
manuscript by telegram.</span></p>
<p><span>He did more than this, and one evening Overbeck
stood on the steps of the post-office and opened
a letter in his hand, and, looking up and off, saw
the world transfigured. His chance had come. In
half a year of time he had accomplished what other
men—other young writers—strive for throughout
the best years of their youth. He had been called
to New York. Conant had offered him a minor
place on his editorial staff.</span></p>
<p><span>Overbeck reached the great city a fortnight
later, and the cutaway coat and pique cravat—unworn
since Commencement—served to fortify
his courage at the first interview with the man who
was to make him—so he believed—famous.</span></p>
<p><span>Ah, the delights, the excitement, the inspiration
of that day! Let those judge who have striven
toward the Great City through years of deferred
hope and heart-sinkings and sacrifice daily renewed.
Overbeck's feet were set in those streets whose
names had become legendary to his imagination.
Public buildings and public squares familiar only
through the weekly prints defiled before him like a
pageant, but friendly for all that, inviting, even.
But the vast conglomerate life that roared by his
ears, like the systole and diastole of an almighty
heart, was for a moment disquieting. Soon the
human resemblance faded. It became as a
machine infinitely huge, infinitely formidable.
It challenged him with superb condescension.</span></p>
<p><span>"I must down you," he muttered, as he made his
way toward Conant's, "or you will down me." He
saw it clearly. There was no other alternative.
The young boy in his foolish finery of a Colfax
tailor's make, with no weapons but such wits as the
gods had given him, was pitted against the leviathan.</span></p>
<p><span>There was no friend nearer than his native state
on the other fringe of the continent. He was
fearfully alone.</span></p>
<p><span>But he was twenty-one. The wits that the gods
had given him were good, and the fine fire that
was within him, the radiant freshness of his
nature, stirred and leaped to life at the challenge.
Ah, he would win, he would win! And in his
exuberance, the first dim consciousness of his power
came to him. He could win, he had it in him; he
began to see that now. That nameless power was
his which would enable him to grip this monstrous
life by the very throat, and bring it down on its
knee before him to listen respectfully to what he
had to say.</span></p>
<p><span>The interview with Conant was no less
exhilarating. It was in the reception-room of the
great house that it took place, and while waiting
for Conant to come in, Overbeck, his heart in his
mouth, recognised, in the original drawings on
the walls, picture after picture, signed by famous
illustrators, that he had seen reproduced in
Conant's magazine.</span></p>
<p><span>Then Conant himself had appeared and shaken
the young author's hand a long time, and had
talked to him with the utmost kindness of his book,
of his plans for the immediate future, of the
work he would do in the editorial office and of the
next novel he wished him to write.</span></p>
<p><span>"We'll only need you here in the mornings,"
said the editor, "and you can put in your
afternoons on your novel. Have you anything in mind
as good as 'Bunt McBride'?"</span></p>
<p><span>"I have a sort of notion for one," hazarded the
young man; and Conant had demanded to hear it.</span></p>
<p><span>Stammering, embarrassed, Overbeck outlined it.</span></p>
<p><span>"I see, I see!" Conant commented. "Yes, there
is a good story in that. Maybe Hastings will want
to use it in the monthly. But we'll make a book
of it, anyway, if you work it up as well as the
McBride story."</span></p>
<p><span>And so the young fellow made his first step in
New York. The very next day he began his second
novel.</span></p>
<p><span>In the editorial office, where he spent his
mornings reading proof and making up "front matter,"
he made the acquaintance of a middle-aged lady,
named Miss Patten, who asked him to call on her,
and later on introduced him into the "set" wherein
she herself moved. The set called itself the "New
Bohemians," and once a week met at Miss Patten's
apartment up-town. In a month's time Overbeck
was a fixture in "New Bohemia."</span></p>
<p><span>It was made up of minor poets whose opportunity
in life was the blank space on a magazine
page below the end of an article; of men past their
prime, who, because of an occasional story in a
second-rate monthly, were considered to have
"arrived"; of women who translated novels from
the Italian and Hungarian; of decayed dramatists
who could advance unimpeachable reasons for the
non-production of their plays; of novelists whose
books were declined by publishers because of
professional jealousy on the part of the "readers," or
whose ideas, stolen by false friends, had appeared
in books that sold by the hundreds of thousands.
In public the New Bohemians were fulsome in the
praise of one another's productions. Did a sonnet
called, perhaps, "A Cryptogram is Stella's Soul"
appear in a current issue, they fell on it with eager
eyes, learned it by heart and recited lines of it
aloud; the conceit of the lover translating the
cipher by the key of love was welcomed with
transports of delight.</span></p>
<p><span>"Ah, one of the most exquisitely delicate
allegories I've ever heard, and so true—so 'in the
tone'!"</span></p>
<p><span>Did a certain one of the third-rate novelists,
reading aloud from his unpublished manuscript,
say of his heroine: "It was the native catholicity of
his temperament that lent strength and depth to her
innate womanliness," the phrase was snapped up on
the instant.</span></p>
<p><span>"How he understands women!"</span></p>
<p><span>"Such </span><em class="italics">finesse</em><span>! More subtle than Henry James."</span></p>
<p><span>"Paul Bourget has gone no further," said one
of the critics of New Bohemia; "our limitations
are determined less by our renunciations than by
our sense of proportion in our conception of ethical
standards."</span></p>
<p><span>The set abased itself. "Wonderful, ah, how
pitilessly you fathom our poor human nature!" New
Bohemia saw colour in word effects. A poet
read aloud:</span></p>
<blockquote>
<div>
<div class="line-block outermost">
<div class="line"><em class="italics">The stalwart rain!</em></div>
<div class="line"><em class="italics">Ah, the rush of down-toppling waters;</em></div>
<div class="line"><em class="italics">The torrent!</em></div>
<div class="line"><em class="italics">Merge of mist and musky air;</em></div>
<div class="line"><em class="italics">The current</em></div>
<div class="line"><em class="italics">Sweeps thwart my blinded sight again.</em></div>
<div class="line"> </div>
</div></div>
</blockquote>
<p><span>"Ah!" exclaimed one of the audience, "see, see
that bright green flash!"</span></p>
<p><span>Thus in public. In private all was different.
Walking home with one or another of the set,
young Overbeck heard their confidences.</span></p>
<p><span>"Keppler is a good fellow right enough, but,
my goodness, he can't write verse!"</span></p>
<p><span>"That thing of Miss Patten's to-night! Did
you ever hear anything so unconvincing, so
obvious? Poor old woman!"</span></p>
<p><span>"I'm really sorry for Martens; awfully decent
sort, but he never should try to write novels."</span></p>
<p><span>By rapid degrees young Overbeck caught the
lingo of the third-raters. He could talk about
"tendencies" and the "influence of reactions." Such
and such a writer had a "sense of form,"
another a "feeling for word effects." He knew all
about "tones" and "notes" and "philistinisms." He
could tell the difference between an allegory
and a simile as far as he could see them. An
anticlimax was the one unforgivable sin under heaven.
A mixed metaphor made him wince, and a split
infinitive hurt him like a blow.</span></p>
<p><span>But the great word was "convincing." To say
a book was convincing was to give positively the
last verdict. To be "unconvincing" was to be shut
out from the elect. If the New Bohemian decided
that the last popular book was unconvincing, there
was no appeal. The book was not to be mentioned
in polite conversation.</span></p>
<p><span>And the author of "The Vision of Bunt McBride,"
as yet new to the world as the day he was
born, with all his eager ambition and quick
sensitiveness, thought that all this was the real thing.
He had never so much as seen literary people
before. How could he know the difference? He
honestly believed that New Bohemia was the true
literary force of New York. He wrote home that
the association with such people, thinkers, poets,
philosophers, was an inspiration; that he had
learned more in one week in their company than
he had learned in Colfax in a whole year.</span></p>
<p><span>Perhaps, too, it was the flattery he received that
helped to carry Overbeck off his feet. The New
Bohemians made a little lion of him when "Bunt
McBride" reached its modest pinnacle of popularity.
They kotowed to him, and toadied to him,
and fagged and tooted for him, and spoke of his
book as a masterpiece. They said he had
succeeded where Kipling had ignominiously failed.
They said there was more harmony of prose
effects in one chapter of "Bunt McBride" than in
everything that Bret Harte ever wrote. They
told him he was a second Stevenson—only with
more refinement.</span></p>
<p><span>Then the women of the set, who were of those
who did not write, who called themselves "mere
dilettantes," but who "took an interest in young
writers" and liked to influence their lives and works,
began to flutter and buzz around him. They told
him that they understood him; that they under
stood his temperament; that they could see where
his forte lay; and they undertook his education.</span></p>
<p><span>There was in "The Vision of Bunt McBride" a
certain sane and healthy animalism that hurt
nobody, and that, no doubt, Overbeck, in later books,
would modify. He had taken life as he found it
to make his book; it was not his fault that the
teamsters, biscuit-shooters and "breed" girls of the
foothills were coarse in fibre. In his sincerity he
could not do otherwise in his novel than paint life
as he saw it. He had dealt with it honestly; he
did not dab at the edge of the business; he had
sent his fist straight through it.</span></p>
<p><span>But the New Bohemians could not abide this.</span></p>
<p><span>"Not so much </span><em class="italics">faroucherie</em><span>, you dear young
Lochinvar!" they said. "Art must uplift. 'Look
thou not down, but up toward uses of a cup';" and
they supplemented the quotation by lines from
Walter Peter, and read to him from Ruskin and
Matthew Arnold.</span></p>
<p><span>Ah, the spiritual was the great thing. We were
here to make the world brighter and better for
having lived in it. The passions of a waitress in
a railway eating-house—how sordid the subject!
Dear boy, look for the soul, strive to rise to higher
planes! Tread upward; every book should leave a
clean taste in the mouth, should tend to make one
happier, should elevate, not debase.</span></p>
<p><span>So by degrees Overbeck began to see his future
in a different light. He began to think that he
really had succeeded where Kipling had failed;
that he really was Stevenson with more refinement,
and that the one and only thing lacking in his work
was soul. He believed that he must strive for the
spiritual, and "let the ape and tiger die." The
originality and unconventionally of his little book
he came to regard as crudities.</span></p>
<p><span>"Yes," he said one day to Miss Patten and a
couple of his friends, "I have been re-reading my
book of late. I can see its limitations—now. It
has a lack of form; the tonality is a little false. It
fails somehow to convince."</span></p>
<p><span>Thus the first Winter passed. In the mornings
Overbeck assiduously edited copy and made up
front matter on the top floor of the Conant
building. In the evenings he called on Miss Patten,
or some other member of the set. Once a week,
up-town, he fed fat on the literary delicatessen that
New Bohemia provided. In the meantime, every
afternoon, from luncheon-time till dark, he toiled
on his second novel, "Renunciations." The
environment of "Renunciations" was a far cry from
Colfax, California. It was a city-bred story, with
no fresher atmosphere than that of bought flowers.
Its </span><em class="italics">dramatis personae</em><span> were all of the leisure class,
opera-goers, intriguers, riders of blood horses,
certainly more refined than Lizzie Toby, biscuit-shooter,
certainly more </span><em class="italics">spirituelle</em><span> than Irma Tejada,
case-keeper in Dog Omahone's faro joint,
certainly more elegant than Bunt McBride,
teamster of the Colfax Iowa Hill Freight
Transportation Company.</span></p>
<p><span>From time to time, as the novel progressed, he
read it to the dilettante women whom he knew
best among the New Bohemians. They advised
him as to its development, and "influenced" its
outcome and dénouement.</span></p>
<p><span>"I think you have found your </span><em class="italics">métier</em><span>, dear boy,"
said one of them, when "Renunciations" was nearly
completed. "To portray the concrete—is it not a
small achievement, sublimated journalese, nothing
more? But to grasp abstractions, to analyse a
woman's soul, to evoke the spiritual essence in
humanity, as you have done in your ninth chapter
of 'Renunciations'—that is the true function of
art. </span><em class="italics">Je vous fais mes compliments</em><span>. 'Renunciations'
is a </span><em class="italics">chef-d'oeuvre</em><span>. Can't you see yourself
what a stride you have made, how much broader
your outlook has become, how much more catholic,
since the days of 'Bunt McBride'?"</span></p>
<p><span>To be sure, Overbeck could see it. Ah, he was
growing, he was expanding. He was mounting
higher planes. He was more—catholic. That, of
all words, was the one to express his mood.
Catholic, ah, yes, he was catholic!</span></p>
<p><span>When "Renunciations" was finished he took the
manuscript to Conant and waited a fortnight in an
agony of suspense and repressed jubilation for the
great man's verdict. He was all the more anxious
to hear it because, every now and then, while
writing the story, doubts—distressing, perplexing—had
intruded. At times and all of a sudden, after days
of the steadiest footing, the surest progress, the
story—the whole set and trend of the affair—would
seem, as it were, to escape from his control.
Where once, in "Bunt McBride," he had gripped,
he must now grope. What was it? He had been
so sure of himself, with all the stimulus of new
surroundings, the work in this second novel should
have been all the easier. But the doubt would fade,
and for weeks he would plough on, till again, and
all unexpectedly, he would find himself in an agony
of indecision as to the outcome of some vital pivotal
episode of the story. Of two methods of treatment,
both equally plausible, he could not say which
was the true, which the false; and he must
needs take, as it were, a leap in the dark—it was
either that or abandoning the story, trusting to
mere luck that he would, somehow, be carried
through.</span></p>
<p><span>A fortnight after he had delivered the manuscript
to Conant he presented himself in the publisher's
office.</span></p>
<p><span>"I was just about to send for you," said Conant.
"I finished your story last week."</span></p>
<p><span>There was a pause. Overbeck settled himself
comfortably in his chair, but his nails were cutting
his palms.</span></p>
<p><span>"Hastings has read it, too—and—well, frankly,
Overbeck, we were disappointed."</span></p>
<p><span>"Yes?" inquired Overbeck, calmly. "H'm—that's
too b-bad."</span></p>
<p><span>He could not hear, or at least could not
understand, just what the publisher said next. Then,
after a time that seemed immeasurably long, he
caught the words:</span></p>
<p><span>"It would not do you a bit of good, my boy, to
have us publish it—it would harm you. There are
a good many things I would lie about, but books
are not included. This 'Renunciations' of yours
is—is, why, confound it, Overbeck, it's foolishness."</span></p>
<p><span>Overbeck went out and sat on a bench in a
square near by, looking vacantly at a fountain as
it rose and fell and rose again with an incessant
cadenced splashing. Then he took himself home
to his hall bedroom. He had brought the
manuscript of his novel with him, and for a long time he
sat at his table listlessly turning the leaves,
confused, stupid, all but inert. The end, however, did
not come suddenly. A few weeks later "Renunciations"
was published, but not by Conant. It bore
the imprint of an obscure firm in Boston. The
covers were of limp dressed leather, olive green,
and could be tied together by thongs, like a
portfolio. The sale stopped after five hundred copies
had been ordered, and the real critics, those who
did not belong to New Bohemia, hardly so much
as noticed the book.</span></p>
<p><span>In the Autumn, when the third-raters had come
back from their vacations, the "evenings" at Miss
Patten's were resumed, and Overbeck hurried to
the very first meeting. He wanted to talk it all over
with them. In his chagrin and cruel disappointment
he was hungry for some word of praise, of
condolement. He wanted to be told again, even
though he had begun to suspect many things, that
he had succeeded where Kipling had failed, that he
was Stevenson with more refinement.</span></p>
<p><span>But the New Bohemians, the same women and
fakirs and half-baked minor poets who had
"influenced" him and had ruined him, could hardly
find time to notice him now. The guest of the
evening was a new little lion who had joined the
set. A symbolist versifier who wrote over the
pseudonym of de la Houssaye, with black, oily hair
and long white hands; him the Bohemians thronged
about in crowds as before they had thronged about
Overbeck. Only once did any one of them pay
attention to the latter. This was the woman who
had nicknamed him "Young Lochinvar." Yes, she
had read "Renunciations," a capital little thing, a
little thin in parts, lacking in </span><em class="italics">finesse</em><span>. He must
strive for his true medium of expression, his true
note. Ah, art was long! Study of the new
symbolists would help him. She would beg him to
read Monsieur de la Houssaye's "The Monoliths." Such
subtlety, such delicious word-chords! It
could not fail to inspire him.</span></p>
<p><span>Shouldered off, forgotten, the young fellow crept
back to his little hall bedroom and sat down to
think it over. There in the dark of the night his
eyes were opened, and he saw, at last, what these
people had done to him; saw the Great Mistake,
and that he had wasted his substance.</span></p>
<p><span>The golden apples, that had been his for the
stretching of the hand, he had flung from him.
Tricked, trapped, exploited, he had prostituted the
great good thing that had been his by right divine,
for the privilege of eating husks with swine. Now
was the day of the mighty famine, and the starved
and broken heart of him, crying out for help,
found only a farrago of empty phrases.</span></p>
<p><span>He tried to go back; he did in very fact go back
to the mountains and the cañons of the great
Sierras. "He arose and went to his father," and,
with such sapped and broken strength as New
Bohemia had left him, strove to wrest some
wreckage from the dying fire.</span></p>
<p><span>But the ashes were cold by now. The fire that
the gods had allowed him to snatch, because he
was humble and pure and clean and brave, had
been stamped out beneath the feet of minor and
dilettante poets, and now the gods guarded close
the brands that yet remained on the altars.</span></p>
<p><span>They may not be violated twice, those sacred
fires. Once in a lifetime the very young and the
pure in heart may see the shine of them and pluck
a brand from the altar's edge. But, once possessed,
it must be watched with a greater vigilance than
even that of the gods, for its light will live only
for him who snatched it first. Only for him that
shields it, even with his life, from the contact of
the world does it burst into a burning and a shining
light. Let once the touch of alien fingers disturb
it, and there remains only a little heap of bitter
ashes.</span></p>
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